Health Sciences In The Media Study: More Kids Used Tobacco, Prescription Drugs Through Pandemic Aug. 26, 2021 A landmark study, conducted by the U.S. National Institute on Drug Abuse, found youth tobacco and prescription drug use rose while alcohol use declined during the pandemic. Cody Welty, a doctoral student and mental health researcher in the Mel and Enid Zuckerman College of Public Health, emphasizes the pressure the pandemic continues to place on kids. “Ask them how their day was and really wait and listen to hear the answer. It’s hard. Online school is hard and going back to school is hard right now,” he said. KOLD-TV (Tucson, AZ) Experts Renew Warnings of ‘Twindemic’ as US Enters Flu Season Amid Rising COVID-19 Cases: ‘We Face the Same Threat This Year’ Aug. 25, 2021 Last year's influenza season turned out to be the mildest on record, but health experts have renewed warnings that a "twindemic" – in which flu and COVID-19 cases simultaneously rise and overwhelm hospitals – may be possible this year, and they urge Americans to get their flu shot. "Last year, we didn’t have a very big flu season because people were using masks and that decreased the flu season activity," said Ricardo Correa, MD, endocrinologist and associate professor of medicine at the College of Medicine – Phoenix. "If we do the same thing this year and we wear masks as much as we can, then the flu season will not hit us as hard as years prior." USA Today Heart Transplant: A Slightly More Level Playing Field Under New UNOS System Aug. 25, 2021 Recent changes to U.S. donor heart allocation were followed by a narrowing of racial disparities in listing and transplant, though much more work remains to eliminate inequality, researchers warned. The article cites an editorial co-authored by Khadijah Breathett, MD, MS, a cardiologist and assistant professor in the College of Medicine – Tucson and Sarver Heart Center researcher, published in the Journal of the American Heart Association. MedPage Today How Fermented Foods May Improve Your Health Aug. 25, 2021 Victoria Maizes, MD, executive director of the Andrew Weil Center for Integrative Medicine at the University of Arizona, shares insights on the health benefits provided by fermented foods. The Buckmaster Show Kids Will Soon Have Highest COVID-19 Case Rate of Any Age Group in Arizona Aug. 24, 2021 Arizona’s COVID-19 outbreak is still widespread and medical experts say cases are rising at an alarming pace among children. The rate of cases among those 15 and younger is projected to surpass the rate of all other age groups in the state, according to data compiled by Joe Gerald, MD, PhD, an associate professor of public health policy and management at the Mel and Enid Zuckerman College of Public Health. "The age distribution of transmission is undergoing a profound shift," Dr. Gerald wrote Friday in his COVID-19 report. KJZZ-FM (NPR) Phoenix, AZ DANGER IN THE DUST: Valley Fever in a Time of Coronavirus Aug. 24, 2021 Fariba Donovan, MD, PhD, assistant professor of medicine with the UArizona Valley Fever Center for Excellence in Tucson, says it’s crucial, now more than ever, for people with symptoms to get tested for Valley fever, because the symptoms are so similar to COVID-19. In fact, a third of all pneumonia cases in Valley fever endemic areas, like Southern Arizona, are due to Valley fever. KOLD-TV (Tucson, AZ) Valley Residents Getting Pfizer Vaccine Following FDA Full Approval Aug. 24, 2021 Maricopa County says it is continuing to offer community-based vaccine events across the area with various partners. The goal is to make access to the vaccine as easy as possible. "Remember in science, we need to be more conservative in waiting for the data and the evidence before we make a pronouncement too early. So, we can really be certain that at this point, it really is safe and effective," said Shad Marvasti, MD, assistant professor of family community and preventive medicine at the College of Medicine – Phoenix. KNXV-TV (ABC) Phoenix UArizona Health Sciences Study Suggests Greater Vaccination Push Needed to Combat Delta Variant Aug. 24, 2021 New data from an ongoing University of Arizona Health Sciences research study show that the COVID-19 vaccines remain effective following the predominance of the delta variant, although at a lower rate than prior to its emergence. The newly released findings from the longitudinal AZ HEROES research study at the Mel and Enid Zuckerman College of Public Health point to a need for more vaccinations to offset the decline in effectiveness. In Business Phoenix ‘You Are Not a Horse.’ FDA Warns Against Use of Animal Dewormer as COVID Treatment, Prevention Aug. 23, 2021 Health officials are warning against using a drug called ivermectin for unapproved use as a medicine to prevent or treat COVID-19. The drug, which has been approved only as an anti-parasitic treatment for humans and animals such as livestock and horses, has been the subject of a spike in calls to the Mississippi Poison Control Center. The Banner Poison and Drug Information Center in Phoenix and the UArizona Poison and Drug Information Center in Tucson have seen an increase in calls about ivermectin exposure and human use. USA Today U.S. Says People Should Wait 8 Months Before a 3rd Vaccine Dose. But Some Aren’t Holding Off Aug. 21, 2021 The top U.S. public health officials announced this week that all Americans can get a booster shot starting the third week of September. The federal guidance says adults over the age of 18 will be eligible for another dose of Pfizer or Moderna eight months after their second dose. Deepta Bhattacharya, PhD, professor of immunobiology at the University of Arizona College of Medicine – Tucson, said getting a booster soon after a second shot “raises the possibility that it won’t work that well.” He explained that third doses will likely work much better after fully vaccinated people lose some of the antibodies in their systems. NBC News Pagination « First First page ‹ Previous Previous page … 221 222 223 224 225 226 227 228 229 … Next › Next page Last » Last page
Study: More Kids Used Tobacco, Prescription Drugs Through Pandemic Aug. 26, 2021 A landmark study, conducted by the U.S. National Institute on Drug Abuse, found youth tobacco and prescription drug use rose while alcohol use declined during the pandemic. Cody Welty, a doctoral student and mental health researcher in the Mel and Enid Zuckerman College of Public Health, emphasizes the pressure the pandemic continues to place on kids. “Ask them how their day was and really wait and listen to hear the answer. It’s hard. Online school is hard and going back to school is hard right now,” he said. KOLD-TV (Tucson, AZ)
Experts Renew Warnings of ‘Twindemic’ as US Enters Flu Season Amid Rising COVID-19 Cases: ‘We Face the Same Threat This Year’ Aug. 25, 2021 Last year's influenza season turned out to be the mildest on record, but health experts have renewed warnings that a "twindemic" – in which flu and COVID-19 cases simultaneously rise and overwhelm hospitals – may be possible this year, and they urge Americans to get their flu shot. "Last year, we didn’t have a very big flu season because people were using masks and that decreased the flu season activity," said Ricardo Correa, MD, endocrinologist and associate professor of medicine at the College of Medicine – Phoenix. "If we do the same thing this year and we wear masks as much as we can, then the flu season will not hit us as hard as years prior." USA Today
Heart Transplant: A Slightly More Level Playing Field Under New UNOS System Aug. 25, 2021 Recent changes to U.S. donor heart allocation were followed by a narrowing of racial disparities in listing and transplant, though much more work remains to eliminate inequality, researchers warned. The article cites an editorial co-authored by Khadijah Breathett, MD, MS, a cardiologist and assistant professor in the College of Medicine – Tucson and Sarver Heart Center researcher, published in the Journal of the American Heart Association. MedPage Today
How Fermented Foods May Improve Your Health Aug. 25, 2021 Victoria Maizes, MD, executive director of the Andrew Weil Center for Integrative Medicine at the University of Arizona, shares insights on the health benefits provided by fermented foods. The Buckmaster Show
Kids Will Soon Have Highest COVID-19 Case Rate of Any Age Group in Arizona Aug. 24, 2021 Arizona’s COVID-19 outbreak is still widespread and medical experts say cases are rising at an alarming pace among children. The rate of cases among those 15 and younger is projected to surpass the rate of all other age groups in the state, according to data compiled by Joe Gerald, MD, PhD, an associate professor of public health policy and management at the Mel and Enid Zuckerman College of Public Health. "The age distribution of transmission is undergoing a profound shift," Dr. Gerald wrote Friday in his COVID-19 report. KJZZ-FM (NPR) Phoenix, AZ
DANGER IN THE DUST: Valley Fever in a Time of Coronavirus Aug. 24, 2021 Fariba Donovan, MD, PhD, assistant professor of medicine with the UArizona Valley Fever Center for Excellence in Tucson, says it’s crucial, now more than ever, for people with symptoms to get tested for Valley fever, because the symptoms are so similar to COVID-19. In fact, a third of all pneumonia cases in Valley fever endemic areas, like Southern Arizona, are due to Valley fever. KOLD-TV (Tucson, AZ)
Valley Residents Getting Pfizer Vaccine Following FDA Full Approval Aug. 24, 2021 Maricopa County says it is continuing to offer community-based vaccine events across the area with various partners. The goal is to make access to the vaccine as easy as possible. "Remember in science, we need to be more conservative in waiting for the data and the evidence before we make a pronouncement too early. So, we can really be certain that at this point, it really is safe and effective," said Shad Marvasti, MD, assistant professor of family community and preventive medicine at the College of Medicine – Phoenix. KNXV-TV (ABC) Phoenix
UArizona Health Sciences Study Suggests Greater Vaccination Push Needed to Combat Delta Variant Aug. 24, 2021 New data from an ongoing University of Arizona Health Sciences research study show that the COVID-19 vaccines remain effective following the predominance of the delta variant, although at a lower rate than prior to its emergence. The newly released findings from the longitudinal AZ HEROES research study at the Mel and Enid Zuckerman College of Public Health point to a need for more vaccinations to offset the decline in effectiveness. In Business Phoenix
‘You Are Not a Horse.’ FDA Warns Against Use of Animal Dewormer as COVID Treatment, Prevention Aug. 23, 2021 Health officials are warning against using a drug called ivermectin for unapproved use as a medicine to prevent or treat COVID-19. The drug, which has been approved only as an anti-parasitic treatment for humans and animals such as livestock and horses, has been the subject of a spike in calls to the Mississippi Poison Control Center. The Banner Poison and Drug Information Center in Phoenix and the UArizona Poison and Drug Information Center in Tucson have seen an increase in calls about ivermectin exposure and human use. USA Today
U.S. Says People Should Wait 8 Months Before a 3rd Vaccine Dose. But Some Aren’t Holding Off Aug. 21, 2021 The top U.S. public health officials announced this week that all Americans can get a booster shot starting the third week of September. The federal guidance says adults over the age of 18 will be eligible for another dose of Pfizer or Moderna eight months after their second dose. Deepta Bhattacharya, PhD, professor of immunobiology at the University of Arizona College of Medicine – Tucson, said getting a booster soon after a second shot “raises the possibility that it won’t work that well.” He explained that third doses will likely work much better after fully vaccinated people lose some of the antibodies in their systems. NBC News